• Latest
Rise of Ugandan leader’s son draws excitement and concern

Rise of Ugandan leader’s son draws excitement and concern

4 years ago
US President Donald Trump pictured with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa during a past meeting.

Trump wants South Africa out of G20

13 hours ago
Paul Biya casts his ballot during Cameroon’s presidential election, which secured him an eighth term in office

Biya’s eighth term sparks Cameroon tension

14 hours ago
Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan casts her vote in the 2025 general election in Dar es Salaam.

Tanzania election fails AU democracy test

14 hours ago
Judges of the Supreme Court of Kenya stand in their official robes on the steps of the Supreme Court building in Nairobi.

Op-Ed: Kenya’s courts face a trust reckoning

14 hours ago
Delegates and ministers from the UAE and over 20 African countries pose for a group photo at the UAE Africa Tourism Investment Summit 2025 in Dubai.

UAE invests $6bn in Africa tourism

14 hours ago
Heavy machinery operating at an African open-pit mine extracting critical minerals for global green energy transition.

Will Africa’s critical minerals spark a boom?

14 hours ago
Aerial view of Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, showing cascading water and lush green surroundings along the Zambezi River.

Zimbabwe tops Forbes 2025 travel list

14 hours ago
Farm workers in Kenya spray crops with protective gear amid concerns over EU-exported banned pesticides harming health and ecosystems

Europe’s toxic pesticide trade exposed

14 hours ago
Donald Trump looks on during a media interaction aboard his campaign aircraft.

ECOWAS slams Trump’s ‘false’ Nigeria terror claims

2 days ago
Former South African president Jacob Zuma with Burkina Faso’s Captain Ibrahim Traoré during a meeting at the presidential palace in Ouagadougou to discuss Pan-African cooperation and economic sovereignty.

Zuma, Traoré forge pan-African alliance

2 days ago
Leaders from Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda greet each other during an East African Community meeting.

Op-Ed: EAC’s democracy crisis starts with parties

2 days ago
Stacks of refined gold bars on a metal surface, representing the UAE’s rising gold imports from Sudan in 2024.

UAE gold imports from Sudan jump 70pc

2 days ago
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Media Kit
  • Policies and Terms
Friday, November 7, 2025
  • Login
  • Register
Africa Briefing
Data & Research Solutions
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business & Economy
  • News
  • Energy
  • Politics
  • Technology
  • Magazine
Subscribe for More
Africa Briefing
No Result
View All Result
Home Featured

Rise of Ugandan leader’s son draws excitement and concern

by Editorial Staff
4 years ago
in Featured, Politics
Reading Time: 3 mins read
247 5
A A
0
Rise of Ugandan leader’s son draws excitement and concern
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

[dropcap]P[/dropcap]UBLIC fetes celebrating the son of Uganda’s leader are raising concern that he is aiming for the presidency after years of apparently being groomed to succeed his father, President Yoweri Museveni, who has held power since 1986.

Three events marking Lt. Gen. Muhoozi Kainerugaba’s 48th birthday have been held in recent days in the capital, Kampala, and his supporters in other parts of this East African country have staged lively rallies they said were in tribute to their future president.

The most recent event, Saturday’s thanksgiving ceremony, was attended by hundreds, including top government officials and military officers.

Kainerugaba, who commands Uganda’s infantry forces, has been increasingly assertive in Twitter posts in which he mentions his wish to rule Uganda. He spoke of increasing the sports budget in favour of young people when he ‘ wins power in this country.’ And he says he will announce his political programme soon.

‘The fact that all those who used to abuse me on a daily basis are now being forced to swallow their words by the people is great,’ he said on May 2, referring to recent rallies where throngs of people wore T-shirts bearing his image.

Kainerugaba’s supporters say he offers Uganda the opportunity of a peaceful transfer of power in a country that has not had one since independence from British colonial rule in 1962. But opposition leaders, critics and others eager for change say his rise is leading the East African country toward hereditary rule.

Kainerugaba’s birthday celebrations should be seen as a formal introduction of ‘the crown prince and heir to the Ugandan throne,’ critic Muniini K. Mulera wrote in a column in the local Daily Monitor newspaper. Museveni ‘has entered his last lap of a long walk towards the realisation of a fifty-year-old dream to create dynastic rule,’ he wrote.

Kainerugaba also faces legal scrutiny. Because Ugandan law prohibits a serving military officer from engaging in partisan affairs, some say Kainerugaba has already crossed the line. They point out that other army officers who discussed politics were humiliated.

A Ugandan attorney last week filed a petition with the Constitutional Court seeking a declaration that Kainerugaba’s political activities are unlawful. That petition also seeks to have Kainerugaba prosecuted for alleged treason, charging that his activities are destabilising.

Kainerugaba joined the army in the late 1990s, and his rise to the top of the armed forces has been controversial, with critics dubbing it the ‘Muhoozi Project’ to prepare him for the presidency.

Museveni and Kainerugaba himself have denied the existence of such a scheme, but it appears a transition is now underway as Museveni, 77, serves what could be his last term without a recognisable successor within his government.

Museveni has not said when he would retire. He has no rivals within the ruling National Resistance Movement party — the reason many believe the military will have a say in choosing his successor.

Most of the heroes of the jungle war that ended years-long civil strife and launched Museveni’s presidency have since died or been retired from the army, putting authority in the hands of young military officers who see Kainerugaba as their leader.

Kainerugaba, the pillar of his father’s personal security apparatus, is now the de facto head of the military, with his allies strategically deployed in command positions across the security services, according to observers.

Kainerugaba’s associates describe him as a dedicated military officer who often eschews ostentatious displays of power and wealth. He attended military schools in the US and Britain before taking charge of a presidential guard unit that has since been expanded into an elite group of special forces.

A taciturn man, Kainerugaba lacks the public charisma and folksy style of Museveni, who has kept power in part by striking deals with his political rivals and even convincing some to serve in his government.

Museveni, a US ally on regional security, is often credited with restoring Uganda to relative peace and security. But in recent years he has faced growing criticism over rights abuses against opposition supporters.

Bobi Wine, the popular singer who challenged Museveni in elections last year, accuses Kainerugaba’s security agents of torture. Wine, whose real name is Kyagulanyi Ssentamu, has repeatedly urged the US to cut support for Uganda’s military.

Some analysts say that Museveni is unlikely to retire at all but could use his remaining years to pave the way for Kainerugaba to succeed him.

Uganda’s next presidential elections are due in 2026.

Although a Kainerugaba presidency is not inevitable, he could build ‘a critical mass of support’ among soldiers and business people to eventually take power, said Nicholas Sengoba, a political analyst based in Kampala. Kainerugaba’s public events, he said, are aimed at ‘testing the waters’ as Museveni gauges public support for family rule.

‘The son helps the father to consolidate,’ he told The Associated Press (AP) ‘The father helps the son now because he’s in charge.’

 

Share196Tweet123
Editorial Staff

Editorial Staff

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan speaking at a public event in a patterned brown headscarf behind microphones.

EAC silent as Tanzania’s democracy unravels

October 28, 2025
Dr Akyaaba Addai-Sebo delivers a lecture in London’s Camden during Black History Season, standing at a podium beside an image of Claudia Jones.

Camden hailed as home of pan-Africanism

October 28, 2025
The African Development Bank headquarters building with the AfDB logo displayed on its facade in Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire

AfDB debars Chinese firm for fraud

October 28, 2025
Hilton Worldwide announces first hotel opening in Chad

Hilton Worldwide announces first hotel opening in Chad

0
Vodafone reveals strong growth in M-Pesa transactions as it launches service in Ghana

Vodafone reveals strong growth in M-Pesa transactions as it launches service in Ghana

0
West African hotels boost security after Burkina attack

West African hotels boost security after Burkina attack

0
US President Donald Trump speaks during a press briefing in Washington after warning of possible military action in Nigeria over alleged persecution of Christians.

Nigeria tells Trump: respect our borders

November 2, 2025
An election officer handling a sealed ballot box labelled ‘Presidential’ during voting at a polling station in Tanzania

Tanzania election labelled an ‘open coup’

November 2, 2025
President Ismail Omar Guelleh of Djibouti attends a government meeting in Djibouti City after lawmakers voted to remove the presidential age limit.

Djibouti drops presidential age cap for Guelleh

November 2, 2025
Africa Briefing

© 2025 Africa Briefing

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Policies and Terms

Stay Connected

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Politics
  • Entertainment

© 2025 Africa Briefing

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?
-
00:00
00:00

Queue

Update Required Flash plugin
-
00:00
00:00
Go to mobile version